Today is the feast of St Richard of Chichester. I have always had an interest in him as he was on eof the patrons, along with Our Lady and St Dominic of the Dominican friary, founded in 1256, three years after his death, in my home town of Pontefract, and that was to be the only medieval foundation dedicated to him.
Richard Wych was a Worcestershire man, born at Droitwich
(then known as Wych) in about 1197. His family were yeomen farmers. His
parents died while he was still at school, and the property was
administered by guardians, who so mismanaged the estate that Richard and
his brother and sister were left almost penniless. The elder brother
was equally unable to cope, and it was Richard who got the farm back on
its feet, by sheer hard manual work. His brother offered to hand over
the whole inheritance to Richard, but with the proviso that he “married
and settled down”, as we would say. Richard however had his mind set on
being a clerk – a member of the clergy, though that did not necessarily
imply priesthood. At all events, he was now free to go to Oxford, where
he joined the school of Edmund Rich, the future archbishop of Canterbury
and Saint. Edmund had a profound influence on Richard, and their
friendship was to be lifelong. After graduating in Law from Oxford,
Richard went on to study in Paris and Bologna. In 1235 he returned to
Oxford, where he was elected Chancellor.
By now his mentor Edmund had become Archbishop of
Canterbury, and within two years he called him to be his own Chancellor.
For the next three years Richard lived and worked with Edmund, and grew
to revere him for his pastoral concern, his devotion to prayer, and his
asceticism. In 1240 he accompanied Edmund on a visit to Rome, and was
at his bedside there when he died.
Up to this time there is no indication that Richard
felt a call to the priesthood. But now, in his early forties, there came
a change. Instead of returning home from Rome, he went to Orleans to
study theology, and there after two years he was ordained priest.
Returning to England, he took up the pastoral duties
of a parish priest in Kent, but he was not to be left in obscurity for
long.
In 1244 the see of Chichester fell vacant. The King,
Henry III, instructed the Chapter to elect his own nominee, a certain
Robert Passelewe, which they duly did, even though it was well known
that this Passelewe was a thoroughly unsuitable candidate. Archbishop
Boniface of Canterbury decided to make a stand against what had become
in practice royal appointment to episcopal sees, and took the brave and
unprecedented step of quashing the election and nominating to Chichester
Richard, his Chancellor. The King’s immediate reaction was to refuse to
accept the homage of Richard, or to release to him the “temporalities”
(the property and income) of the see, which were legally held by the
Crown during an interregnum. Richard appealed to the Pope, who upheld
his appointment and personally consecrated him bishop at Lyons on 5th
March 1245.
It was an unhappy beginning. When Richard came to
Chichester to take possession of his see, he found the gates of the city
closed against him and access to his estates barred, by order of the
King. He was given lodging, in defiance of the royal will, by Simon, the
Rector of Tarring, who became a lifelong friend. There and then Richard
began the work of chief pastor, working from the Rectory at Tarring. He
visited assiduously the parishes, monasteries and homes for the sick
and poor in the diocese. After sixteen months the King relented, under
threat of excommunication by the Pope, although he still refused to
restore the income that had accrued to the royal treasury during the
dispute. Richard took possession of his Cathedral amid great rejoicing.
The Bishop could now devote himself fully to
much-needed reforms. He instituted diocesan synods, at which the
teaching and laws of the Church were expounded, and local statutes
enacted. These statutes covered a wide range. The sacraments were to be
administered without payment, Mass was to be celebrated in a dignified
manner, clergy must practice celibacy, observe residence and wear
clerical dress. There were instructions regarding the hearing of
confessions, and clergy were reminded of their duty of hospitality and
care of the poor. At the same time he made provision for their proper
payment and security of tenure. The laity were obliged to attend Mass on
Sundays and Holy Days, and all must know by heart the Lord’s Prayer,
the Hail Mary and the Creed.
He also had to face the task of fund-raising for the
maintenance of the Cathedral. He revived the practice of “Pentecostals”,
directing that all parishioners should visit the cathedral church once a
year at Whitsuntide, there to pay their dues. Those who lived too far
away could fulfill this duty at Hastings or Lewes, and those unable to
attend at all must still hand in their dues.
Richard set great store by hospitality, and he kept a
good table; but he himself was frugal, and refused the good things he
provided for his guests. He practised penance, wearing a hair shirt to
the day of his death. He was a man of compassion, his biographer
mentioning particularly his concern for handicapped children and
convicted criminals. His early life on the farm is echoed in some of the
miracle stories told about him – the out-of-season flowering of a fruit
tree at Tarring, good advice to men fishing on the bridge at Lewes,
resulting in an exceptional catch.
In 1252 the Pope appointed Richard to preach the
Crusade. The Bishop saw this not just as a means of raising money but as
a call to renewal of life – much as we would see a Holy Year. He began a
tour along the south coast, which eventually brought him to Dover. Here
he consecrated a cemetery chapel for the poor, which he dedicated to
his friend and teacher, St Edmund, who had been the chief inspiration
for his own life’s work. It was his last public function. A few days
later he collapsed. His last prayer has come down to us: “Thanks be to
thee, my Lord Jesus Christ, for all the benefits thou hast bestowed on
me, for all the pains and insults thou hast borne for me. And thou
knowest, Lord, that if it should please thee I am ready to bear insults
and torments and death for thee; and as thou knowest this to be the
truth, have mercy upon me, for to thee do I commend my soul.” He died on
3rd April 1253. He was about 56 years of age, and had been bishop no
more than eight years.
His body was brought back to Chichester, where he was
immediately hailed as a saint. He was canonised within the decade, and
his body placed in a new shrine behind the High Altar in his cathedral,
where it remained until destroyed at the Reformation. But today Richard
is honoured again in that same spot, as a Saint and patron of Sussex.
Text: Universalis website
A Tribute to Saint Richard by John R. H. Moorman, sometime Bishop of Ripon and a noted church historian:
A great pastor, a great lover of God and man |
---|
Facetus, largus, curialis, vultu hilaris
(“jolly, warm-hearted, courteous, and of cheerful countenance”); in
these words Friar Ralph Bocking described his old master, St Richard of
Chichester, whom he served for many years as companion and confessor.
There was something big and impressive about St Richard, something
large, warm, and comfortable. If the Church had not seen fit to canonize
him, he would certainly have been canonized by popular opinion, for he
was just the sort of man whom people loved and revered.
Richard is remembered not as a great scholar or a
great political figure, but as a great pastor – a wise, diligent and
saintly bishop who administered his diocese with a perfect mixture of
what St Paul calls “goodness and severity”, of discipline and love. He
found himself called to the administration of a diocese sadly
disorganized by neglect and by the fact that he himself was, for the
first two years, a homeless vagrant. Yet he pulled it together. As early
as 1246, while he was still under the royal ban, he published his
Statutes which he expected all his people to observe.
He was a strict disciplinarian – in his diocese, in
his household, and in himself. Clergy who were lazy or immoral came in
for severe rebuke, and he expelled one man from his living in spite of
appeals from some of the highest personages in the land, including the
king and queen. So also with the laity. When the people of Lewes dragged
a thief out of a church, in which he had sought sanctuary, and lynched
him, Richard made them dig up the body, carry it on their shoulders to
the church, and give it Christian burial. In his own household he was
much loved as a wise father, though here again he ruled with severity.
He expected high standards of honesty and uprightness among his
household and dismissed those who misbehaved. But he was above all
things severe with himself. Unlike many of his fellow bishops, he hated
ostentation and display, and always dressed soberly and fared simply.
Meanwhile his greatest self-discipline was in the realm of his prayer
life. Early visitors to his chapel sometimes found the bishop stretched
on the ground, having spent all night in prayer. He used always to
reproach himself if the birds were awake and singing their songs before
he was at his prayers and praises before the altar of God.
Richard was therefore a disciplinarian; but the
quality for which he was so greatly loved by his people was his
generosity and affection. He loved to give things away, to the great
distress of his stewards and bailiffs who were trying so hard to restore
the ravaged resources of the diocese. When he entered a village he
would ask the priest to give him the names of any in his parish who were
poor or sick, so that he could visit them himself and relieve them with
gifts of food or money. Bocking records that, on many occasions, the
bishop went out of his way to bury the dead “with his own hands”.
There are many miracles connected with Richard’s life,
many of them very human. Once, when celebrating Candlemas at Cake ham,
he joined in a procession which vent outside the church, each member
carrying a lighted candle. A gust of wind blew all the candles out.
Suddenly it was noticed that the bishop’s candle was alight again. “Who
lit my candle?” said Richard to one of his chaplains. “No one, my Lord”,
came the reply. Richard looked again at the candle, then put his finger
to his lips and said: “Not a word”. Out of a century which produced
many great lights the candle of St Richard of Chichester still burns
brightly, for he was a great saint, a great pastor, a great lover of God
and man.
Text: Universalis - calendar for the Archdiocese of Birmingham
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